Croatian fascist leader Ante Pavelic makes his first state visit to Nazi Germany 16 June 1941.
From left to right: Pavelic, Hitler, Hermann Goering.

The Ustashe symbol - the crucifix with knife, grenade and pistol - was present
when Ustashe took their military oaths.

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As a clerical-fascist state, the Catholic clergy were integrated into the highest levels of government.
Above, Zagreb Archbishop Alojzije Stepinac (far right) officiates at a Croatian state ceremony in 1941.

A child in one of the Jasenovac Camps. (Photo courtesy of Marko Rucnov)

Hundreds of thousands of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia were massacred
in their own towns and villages. This picture shows the exhumation of victims in
Sarajevo in April 1945 with relatives present for identification.
(Photo courtesy of Marko Rucnov)

Jasenovac Camp commander Maks Luburic and Nazi Lieutenant Schmidt interview Jasenovac
prisoners for forced labor in Nazi munitions factories in Germany at Jasenovac on
12 June 1942. Thousands of Serbs and Yugoslav Jews who were forced to work in Nazi
wartime industry have never received a penny in compensation from the official Claims Commission.
(Photo courtesy of Marko Rucnov)

One of the central Jasenovac camps, "Ciglane" (the brick factory), as it appeared
after the departure of the Ustashe in April 1945.
(Photo courtesy of Marko Rucnov)

Croatian fascist leader Ante Pavelic awarding the Archbishop A. Stepinac the highest honor
(medal shown here in photograph) of the Croatian Nazi state. Stepinac was both an official and
an accomplice in the Holocaust in Yugoslavia. The Catholic Church to this day refuses to
acknowledge their involvement or the guilt of Stepinac.
(Photo courtesy of Marko Rucnov)